General University Requirements Objectives

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General University Requirements
Objectives
The general requirements for students who entered Brandeis in
the fall of 2000 and thereafter incorporate a variety of
interconnected elements to build a strong, general education
foundation. The fundamental goals of the program are to improve
students’ abilities to integrate knowledge from different fields; to
provide opportunities for the acquisition and development of
writing, linguistic, and quantitative skills; to introduce
flexibility in the scheduling of degree requirements throughout
the undergraduate career; and to expand students’ opportunities
to interact with faculty in small class settings in the first year of
instruction.
General University Requirements
The basic outline of the requirements for students who entered
Brandeis in the fall of 2000 and thereafter is as follows:
A. University Seminar in Humanistic Inquiries
All students in their first year will complete one semester course
from the USEM program; this course may or may not be
designated as a USEM+W course (see University Writing below).
B. University Writing
All students will complete one of the following options:
Option I: One University Seminar in Humanistic Inquiries Plus
Writing (USEM+W) taken in the first year, plus two writingintensive courses.
Option II: One University Writing Seminar (UWS) taken in the
first year, plus one writing-intensive course, in addition to a
University Seminar in Humanistic Inquiries (also taken in the
first year).
Students normally complete the writing-intensive component of
the writing requirement in their second or third year. Courses
numbered in the 90s may not satisfy the writing intensive
designation.
C. Quantitative Reasoning
All students will take one course that is designated as meeting
the quantitative reasoning requirement.
D. Foreign Language
The foreign language requirement is met by successful completion of
a third semester course (normally numbered in the 30s) in the
introductory language sequence. No more than one course (and never
the final one) in the sequence may be taken on the pass-fail grading
option.
E. Non-Western and Comparative Studies
Students will complete one semester course designated as meeting
the requirement in non-Western and comparative studies.
F. School Distribution
Students will complete one semester course in each of the four
schools of the University: Creative Arts, Humanities, Science, and
Social Science. In general, “double counting” is encouraged; most
students will satisfy the school distribution requirement in the
context of others, e.g., in satisfying the requirements of a major or
minor. Between and among general University requirements, the only
limitations on double counting are as follows: University Seminars in
Humanistic Inquiries are interdisciplinary in character and have
membership in no specific school of the University. The three-course
foreign language sequence may not be applied toward the humanities
component of this requirement. No single course in a student’s
program may satisfy the quantitative reasoning requirement and the
science component of this requirement. No courses numbered in the
90s may apply toward this component. Finally, a single course may be
used toward school distribution in only one school.
The pages that follow contain additional information (including
course lists) for the non-Western and comparative studies,
quantitative reasoning, University seminar, and writing
requirements.
377
Foreign Language
Objectives
Knowledge of a foreign language is intrinsic to a sound education
in the liberal arts. Language not only defines cultural identity, it
constitutes the basis of the literary and philosophical heritage
that is at the heart of advanced learning in the humanities.
Stepping into another language enriches the imagination by
offering fresh insights, perspectives that challenge unexamined
habits of mind, and the simple adventure of gaining access to an
alien way of life and thought.
Brandeis requires its undergraduates to command a certain degree
of proficiency in the use of one foreign language, either ancient
or modern. The requirement is satisfied when the student has
successfully completed and passed a 30-level (or higher) course
with a letter grade. The customary progression for language
course work done at the University is three semesters comprising
the 10-, 20-, and 30-level course sequence. The number of class
hours required per week in any given course may vary depending
on departmental requirements.
Below is a list of the language programs of study available at Brandeis
with the basic course sequence for satisfying the language
requirement. Additional courses beyond the basic sequence can be
found in the course listings for each of these programs.
Basic Language Sequences
Arabic
Chinese
French
German
Greek (Ancient)
Hebrew
Biblical Hebrew
Italian
Japanese
Latin
Russian
Spanish
Yiddish
10a,
10a,
10a,
32a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
10a,
31a,
10a,
20b, 30a
20b or 29b, 30a
20b, and one of the following:
33a, 34a
20b, and 30a
20b, 30a
20b or 29b, 34a, 35a, 39a
20b or 29b, NEJS 10a
20b, 30a
20b, 30a
20b, 30a
20b, 30a
20b, and one of the following:
32a, 33a, 34a
20b, 30a
378
Non-Western and Comparative Studies
Objectives
The non-Western and comparative studies requirement
encourages students to explore through various disciplines
cultures beyond the Western tradition. The common goal of
courses in the program is to acquaint students with world-views,
indigenous intellectual traditions, and social institutions that
have developed largely outside the traditions of European society
and its North American transplants. By examining some
particular culture, society, or region of the non-Western world
Courses of Instruction
AAAS 18b
Africa and the West
AAAS 60a
Economics of Third World Hunger
AAAS 80a
Economy and Society in Africa
AAAS 85a
Survey of Southern African History
AAAS 115a
Introduction to African History
AAAS 122a
Politics of Southern Africa
(such as those of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and
Oceania) or by systematically comparing a range of values and
institutions across cultural boundaries, students are expected to
broaden their understanding of human achievements and
potentialities beyond their own heritage. The program includes the
comparative analysis of cultures and their interactions and draws
attention to the intellectual problems inherent in the study of
cultural systems other than one’s own.
ANTH 1a
Introduction to the Comparative Study of
Human Societies
COML 122b
Writing Home and Abroad: Literature by
Women of Color
ANTH 55a
Models of Development
ENG 17b
African Novel
ANTH 80a
Anthropology of Religion
ENG 77b
Literatures of Global English
ANTH 105a
Myth and Ritual
ENG 127a
The Novel in India
ANTH 127a
Medicine, Body, and Culture
FA 12a
History of Asian Art
ANTH 133a
Tradition and the Contemporary Experience
in Sub-Saharan Africa
FA 13b
Buddhist Art
AAAS 123a
Third World Ideologies
ANTH 134a
South Asia: Tradition and the
Contemporary Experience
AAAS 126b
Political Economy of the Third World
ANTH 135b
Modern South Asia: Society and Politics
AAAS 132b
Introduction to African Literature
ANTH 144a
The Anthropology of Gender
AAAS 133b
The Literature of the Caribbean
ANTH 147b
The Rise of Mesoamerican Civilization
AAAS 134b
Novel and Film of the African Diaspora
ANTH 153a
Writing Systems and Scribal Traditions
AAAS 158a
Theories of Development and
Underdevelopment
ANTH 156a
Power and Violence: The Anthropology of
Political Systems
AAAS 167a
African and Caribbean Comparative
Political Systems
ANTH 163b
Production, Consumption, and Exchange
AAAS 175a
Comparative Politics of North Africa
ANTH 184b
Cross-Cultural Art and Aesthetics
COML 111b
Creating the Transnational Caribbean:
Language, Gender, Race
FA 15b
Arts of the Ming Dynasty
FA 24b
Twentieth-Century and Contemporary
Latin American Art
FA 181b
The Art of Japan
FA 182a
The Art of China
FA 184a
Studies in Asian Art
FREN 165b
Haiti, Then and Now
HIST 71a
Latin American History, Pre-Conquest to
1870
HIST 71b
Latin American History, 1870 to the
Present
HIST 80a
Introduction to East Asian Civilization
Non-Western and Comparative Studies
HIST 80b
East Asia: Nineteenth Century to the
Present (China and Japan)
379
NEJS 186a
Introduction to the Qur’an
POL 148a
Seminar: Contemporary Chinese Politics
NEJS 187a
Political Islam
POL 150a
Politics of Southeast Asia
HIST 148b
Central Asia in Modern Times
NEJS 187b
Shi’ism and Political Protest in the Middle
East
POL 180b
Sustaining Development
HIST 174a
The Legacy of 1898: U.S.-Caribbean
Relations since the Spanish-American War
NEJS 188a
The Rise and Decline of the Ottoman
Empire, 1300-1800
HIST 176a
The Emergence of Modern Japan
NEJS 188b
The Destruction of the Ottoman Empire,
1800-1923
HIST 116a
History of West Africa
HIST 181a
Seminar on Traditional Chinese Thought
IMES 104a
Islam: Civilization and Institutions
LGLS 124b
International Law and Development
NEJS 113b
Law in the Bible and the Ancient Near East
NEJS 116a
Ancient Near Eastern Religion and
Mythology
NEJS 122a
Dealing with Evil in Ancient Babylon and
Beyond: Magic and Witchcraft in Antiquity
NEJS 144a
Jews in the World of Islam
NEJS 184a
Music in Biblical and Near Eastern Religion
NEJS 185b
The Making of the Modern Middle East
NEJS 193a
Societies in Conflict: Exploring the Middle
East through Authentic Materials
NEJS 194a
Civil Society in the Middle East
NEJS 195a
Military and Politics in the Middle East
NEJS 197b
Political Cultures of the Middle East
PHIL 119b
Chinese Philosophy
REL 107a
Approaches to Religious Studies
SOC 107a
Global Apartheid and Global Social
Movements
SOC 125b
U.S.-Caribbean Relations
SOC 171a
Women Leaders and Transformation in
Developing Countries
SPAN 111b
Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPAN 163a
The Latin American Boom and Beyond
SPAN 164b
Studies in Latin American Literature
SPAN 168b
Latin America Narrated by Women
POL 128a
The Politics of Revolution: State Violence
and Popular Insurgency in the Third World
SPAN 192a
Women’s Fiction in Translation
POL 140a
Politics of Africa
WMNS 195b
The Woman’s Voice in the Muslim World
POL 144a
Latin American Politics I
POL 144b
Latin American Politics II
POL 146b
Seminar: Topics in Revolutions in the
Third World
POL 147a
The Government and Politics of China
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